Striking images from the Sahara Desert show large lakes etched into rolling...

CNN Climate 1 year ago

Striking images from the Sahara Desert show large lakes etched into rolling sand dunes after one of the most arid, barren places in the world was hit with its first floods in decades. The Sahara does experience rain, but usually just a few inches a year and rarely in late summer. Over two days in September, however, intense rain fell in parts of the desert in southeast Morocco, after a low pressure system pushed across northwestern Sahara. Preliminary NASA satellite data showed nearly 8 inches of rain in some parts of the region. Tap the link in @cnn's bio to read more. 📸: AP

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 5 hours ago



The UK’s £15 billion Warm Homes Plan marks a pivotal investment in sustainable construction, accelerating the shift toward energy‑efficient buildings with solar panels, heat pumps and advanced insulation. This large‑scale retrofit programme signals a transition from scattered pilot projects to systemic delivery, underscoring the urgency of whole life carbon assessment within national housing policy. Rapid deployment will demand certified installers, scalable finance and rigorous sustainable building design standards supported by breeam and forthcoming breeam v7 frameworks to ensure measurable progress toward net zero carbon buildings and net zero whole life carbon outcomes.

Decarbonisation efforts risk stall without simultaneous reform of grid infrastructure. Current transmission charging deters renewable generation, threatening the cost‑effectiveness of electrified heat. Long‑term policy alignment between renewable deployment and retrofit finance is essential for meaningful carbon footprint reduction and environmental sustainability in construction. Reliable low‑carbon electricity is the foundation for low carbon building performance, reducing reliance on carbon‑intensive energy and supporting the UK’s trajectory toward carbon neutral construction. This challenge echoes recent developments as seen in plans for a huge wind farm paused over ‘unfair’ grid charges.

International signals remain uneven. Canada’s expanded CCUS incentives for oil extraction without equivalent measures for cement and steel undercut the potential for low‑carbon material innovation. Tackling embodied carbon in materials and the carbon footprint of construction demands targeted incentives for low carbon construction materials, renewable building materials and verified environmental product declarations (EPDs) to strengthen transparency across supply chains.

The construction industry faces a strategic imperative to integrate whole life carbon thinking with circular economy in construction models, advancing eco‑friendly construction and resource efficiency in construction. A coordinated approach to lifecycle assessment, life cycle cost evaluation and circular construction strategies will drive decarbonising the built environment and enable true sustainable material specification. Aligning retrofit deployment, workforce training and grid reform forms the backbone of a high‑performance green construction sector built on measurable sustainable building practices, resilient supply chains and authentic commitment to sustainability.

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